| Mentor Cana on Wed, 31 Mar 1999 20:00:37 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime> [kcc-news] Kosova: Ethnic Albanians Expelled (fwd) |
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Human Rights Watch
HUMAN RIGHTS FLASH #9
March 30, 1999
YUGOSLAV GOVERNMENT FORCES SYSTEMATICALLY EXPEL
ETHNIC ALBANIANS FROM KOSOVO
Refugees reported to Human Rights Watch researchers today that
Serbian special police and Yugoslav military units are systematically
expelling ethnic Albanians from Kosovo, including the cities of Pec
and Prizren, in a well-orchestrated and centrally organized campaign
to rid the region of the majority of its population. The stories of
refugees interviewed by Human Rights Watch staff in Albania and
Macedonia revealed a consistent pattern in the conduct of the
expulsions and their timing, underscoring the fact that the Yugoslav
government evidently made a decision over the weekend to "cleanse" the
region of ethnic Albanians.
Scores of refugees interviewed today described their expulsion from
their homes by Serbian forces. Refugees from the major Kosovo cities
of Pec (population approximately 100,000) and Prizren (population
approximately 80,000) reported that there was widespread shooting in
and around the cities from Thursday, March 25 to Saturday, March 27,
during which time many shops were burned or bombed. Starting either
on Saturday or Sunday, refugees reported that their homes were raided
by Serbian special police and/or Yugoslav Army units who moved from
neighborhood to neighborhood, ordering people to leave their homes and
forcing them into columns that were then accompanied to the border.
Refugees repeatedly told how soldiers and police threatened that
anyone who did not leave within four hours would be killed.
Those who carried out the raids were either Serbian special police
dressed in blue camouflage uniforms with either black ski masks or
black grease paint on their faces or Yugoslav Army units dressed in
green uniforms with either red or white bandanas. One person
interviewed by Human Rights Watch also described Serbs in civilian
clothes and another spoke of Serbs in all-black who participated in
the raids.
All ethnic Albanian residents of Pec, a city in western Kosovo,
reported that they were forced to gather in the central square where
local trucks and private buses had been commandeered by the police to
transport them out of the city. None of those interviewed by Human
Rights Watch were allowed to take their own vehicles. It appears that
a large convoy departed Pec at approximately 11 a.m. accompanied by
Yugoslav forces who then stopped them about one hour from the border
with Albania and forced them to walk the rest of the way.
Several of those interviewed by Human Rights Watch reported that
individuals had been pulled out of the convoy and killed, and one
person interviewed reported that soldiers stopped the bus he was on
and took between 10 and 15 men off the bus. He reported having
subsequently heard shooting, but had not actually seen anyone shot.
He added, "As we drove past, I saw blood on the road." Human Rights
Watch was not able to confirm these reports or find individuals who
had been eyewitnesses to the reported killings.
Similarly, refugees who were forced to flee the town of Prizren, in
southwestern Kosovo, reported that they were rounded up on Sunday
morning and forced to leave their homes. In contrast to the expulsion
in Pec, no vehicles were provided to transport the residents from the
town. Instead, they departed in their own cars, tractors, or on foot
to the Albanian border.
Those interviewed by Human Rights Watch reported that both cities were
almost completely emptied during the raids, although some handicapped
and elderly Albanians were reportedly left behind in Pec. Human Rights
Watch is deeply concerned about their safety.
For the past year, the Yugoslav authorities have often targetted
ethnic Albanian villages which they claimed were harboring the Kosovo
Liberation Army. However, the expulsions reported in Pec and Prizren
mark the first time that major cities in Kosovo have been targeted
with what appears to be the sole motive of "ethnically cleansing" the
region.
***
This human rights flash is an occasional information bulletin from Human
Rights
Watch. It will include human rights updates on the situation in Yugoslavia
generally and in Kosovo specifically. For further information contact Fred
Abrahams at (212) 216-1270 or
Abrahaf@hrw.org.
This and other information is also available on our website:
<http://www.hrw.org/>www.hrw.org ***
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